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Alcatraz: More than a landmark.
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An unforgettable Lands End evening
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2025 Report to the CommunitySee YOUR impact for parks
Alcatraz: More than a landmark.
Visit Alcatraz NowAlcatraz: More than a landmark.
An unforgettable Lands End evening
Get Trails Forever Dinner ticketsAn unforgettable Lands End evening
Become a Golden Gate Keeper now!
Give monthlyBecome a Golden Gate Keeper now!
You are likely to award this National Historic Site as having the most astonishing view of the Golden Gate Bridge. A Civil War-era brick fort, it lies directly below the southern end of the span. Check for tours, especially candlelight evening ones, cannon drills, and annual Civil War reenactments. Interestingly, no military action ever occurred here. Completed in 1861, Fort Point never saw action during the Civil War, and the advent of rifled artillery soon rendered this type of fortification obsolete. During construction of the Golden Gate Bridge, Chief Engineer Joseph Strauss redesigned the bridge to preserve the fortress as a “fine example of the mason’s art.”
During the War of 1812, the British landed in Chesapeake Bay and marched straight into the nation’s capital. To prevent future embarrassments, President Madison ordered a new system of forts (known as the Third System) to guard the nation’s seaports. Completed in 1861 at a cost of $2.8 million, Fort Point was the only “Third System” fort built on the Pacific Coast.
During the Civil War, 140 soldiers manned Fort Point, which was armed with 65 heavy artillery cannons, four flank howitzers, and five coehorn and six siege mortars. Although Confederate forces never attacked the fort, its walls could have theoretically withstood the impact of 10,000 cannonballs before giving way.
However, the invention of rifled cannons—capable of breaching brick walls—rendered the structure vulnerable. After the Civil War, Fort Point was intermittently garrisoned, and saw its last active duty in World War II.
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